bubblechart3Define a set of bubble coordinates as the vectors
x,y, andz. Defineszas a vector that specifies the bubble sizes. Then create a bubble chart ofx,y, andz.
x = rand(1,20); y = rand(1,20); z = rand(1,20); sz = rand(1,20); bubblechart3(x,y,z,sz); fig2plotly()
Define a set of bubble coordinates as the vectors
x,y, andz. Defineszas a vector that specifies the bubble sizes. Then create a bubble chart ofx,y, andz, and specify the color as red. By default, the bubbles are partially transparent.
x = rand(1,20); y = rand(1,20); z = rand(1,20); sz = rand(1,20); bubblechart3(x,y,z,sz,'red'); fig2plotly()
For a custom color, you can specify an RGB triplet or a hexadecimal color code. For example, the hexadecimal color code
'#7031BB', specifies a shade of purple.
bubblechart3(x,y,z,sz,'#7031BB'); fig2plotly()
You can also specify a different color for each bubble. For example, specify a vector to select colors from the figure's colormap.
c = 1:20; bubblechart3(x,y,z,sz,c) fig2plotly()
Define a set of bubble coordinates as the vectors
x,y, andz. Defineszas a vector that specifies the bubble sizes. Then create a bubble chart ofx,y, andz. By default, the bubbles are 60% opaque, and the edges are completely opaque with the same color.
x = rand(1,20); y = rand(1,20); z = rand(1,20); sz = rand(1,20); bubblechart3(x,y,z,sz); fig2plotly()
You can customize the opacity and the outline color by setting the
MarkerFaceAlphaandMarkerEdgeColorproperties, respectively. One way to set a property is by specifying a name-value pair argument when you create the chart. For example, you can specify 20% opacity by setting theMarkerFaceAlphavalue to0.20.
bc = bubblechart3(x,y,z,sz,'MarkerFaceAlpha',0.20); fig2plotly()
If you create the chart by calling the
bubblechart3function with a return argument, you can use the return argument to set properties on the chart after creating it. For example, you can change the outline color to purple.
bc.MarkerEdgeColor = [0.5 0 0.5]; fig2plotly()
Define a data set that shows the contamination levels of a certain toxin across different towns in a metropolitan area.
towns = randi([25000 500000],[1 30]); nsites = randi(10,1,30); nregulated = (-3 * nsites) + (5 * randn(1,30) + 20); levels = (3 * nsites) + (7 * randn(1,30) + 20);
Display the data in a bubble chart. Create axis labels using the
xlabel,ylabel, andzlabelfunctions. Use thebubblesizefunction to make all the bubbles between 5 and 30 points in diameter. Then add a bubble legend that shows the relationship between bubble size and population.
bubblechart3(nsites,nregulated,levels,towns)
xlabel('Industrial Sites')
ylabel('Regulated Sites')
zlabel('Contamination Level')
bubblesize([5 30])
bubblelegend('Town Population','Location','eastoutside')
fig2plotly()
Define two sets of data that show the contamination levels of a certain toxin across different towns on the east and west sides of a certain metropolitan area.
towns1 = randi([25000 500000],[1 30]); towns2 = towns1/3; nsites1 = randi(10,1,30); nsites2 = randi(10,1,30); nregulated1 = (-3 * nsites1) + (5 * randn(1,30) + 20); nregulated2 = (-2 * nsites2) + (5 * randn(1,30) + 20); levels1 = (3 * nsites1) + (7 * randn(1,30) + 20); levels2 = (5 * nsites2) + (7 * randn(1,30) + 20);
Create a tiled chart layout so you can visualize the data side-by-side. Then create an axes object in the first tile and plot the data for the east side of the city. Add a title and axis labels. Then repeat the process in the second tile to plot the west side data.
tiledlayout(2,1,'TileSpacing','compact')
ax1 = nexttile;
% East side
bubblechart3(ax1,nsites1,nregulated1,levels1,towns1);
title('East Side')
xlabel('Industrial Sites')
ylabel('Regulated Sites')
zlabel('Contamination Level')
% West side
ax2 = nexttile;
bubblechart3(ax2,nsites2,nregulated2,levels2,towns2);
title('West Side')
xlabel('Industrial Sites')
ylabel('Regulated Sites')
zlabel('Contamination Level')
fig2plotly()
Reduce all the bubble sizes to make it easier to see all the bubbles. In this case, change the range of diameters to be between
5and20points.
bubblesize(ax1,[5 20]) bubblesize(ax2,[5 20])
The east side towns are three times the size of the west side towns, but the bubble sizes do not reflect this information in the preceding charts. This is because the smallest and largest bubbles map to the smallest and largest data points in each of the axes. To display the bubbles on the same scale, define a vector called
alltownsthat includes the populations from both sides of the city. The use thebubblelimfunction to reset the scaling for both charts.
alltowns = [towns1 towns2]; newlims = [min(alltowns) max(alltowns)]; bubblelim(ax1,newlims) bubblelim(ax2,newlims)